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Legendary filmmaker Mrinal Sen famed for his ability to put searching questions before the society — especially the middle class — died at his south Kolkata residence on Sunday following old age complications, family sources said.

Sen, 95, a widower, is survived by his son Kunal.

Sen, who was ailing for a long time, breathed his last at his Bhowanipore home around 10 a.m. after a cardiac arrest, his family physician said.

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His funeral is scheduled to be held on January 2 after his son comes back from the United States.

Mrinal Sen: All You Need To Know About This Legendary Filmmaker!

Sen’s body has been kept in city mortuary “Peace World”. According to family sources, the filmmaker’s last journey will not be stopped anywhere for public display on its way to the funeral.

His death brings the curtains down on one of the most glorious chapters of filmmaking in India, where Sen and late directors Satyajit Ray and Ritwik Ghatak are revered as the ‘trinity’ for giving birth to the parallel (or new) cinema movement in the country.

The “trinity” gave a new direction to the idea of filmmaking in India, displaying spontaneity, aesthetic sense and deep knowledge of the medium, that made the world look up in wonder and respect their creations.

Born on May 14, 1923, at Faridpur (now in Bangladesh), Sen made his first Bengali film ‘Rat Bhore’ (The Dawn) in 1953, but it was his second directorial effort ‘Neel Akasher Niche’ (Under the Blue Sky) that received acclaim in the country for its lyricism and humane qualities.

Sen followed it up with ‘Baishey Shravan’ (Wedding Day) that earned him plaudits from the critics beyond Indian shores.

In 1969, Sen worked on a small budget provided by the Central government to direct ‘Bhuvan Shome’ (Mr. Shome) — a film regarded as an important milestone in the new cinema movement in India.

A lifelong Leftist, who, however, never took the membership of any communist party in India, Sen has left behind a rich repertoire of 27 feature films, 14 short and four documentaries during a career spanning six decades.